Responses to desiccation stress in lichens are different from those in their photobionts.
Plant Cell Physiol
; 50(4): 879-88, 2009 Apr.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-19304738
In order to clarify the role of symbiotic association in desiccation tolerance of photosynthetic partners in lichens, responses to air-drying and hypertonic treatments in a green-algal lichen (a chlorolichen, Ramalina yasudae Räsänen) and its green algal photobiont (freshly released and cultured Trebouxia sp.) were studied. Responses to dehydration in the isolated Trebouxia sp. were different from those in the lichen, R. yasudae, i.e. (i) the PSII reaction was totally inhibited in R. yasudae when photosynthesis was completely inhibited by desiccation, but it remained partially active in isolated Trebouxia sp; (ii) dehydration-induced quenching of PSII fluorescence was less in the isolated Trebouxia sp. compared with that in R. yasudae, suggesting that a substance(s) or a mechanism(s) to dissipate absorbed light energy to heat was lost by the isolation of the photobiont; and (iii) the air-dried isolated Trebouxia sp. showed a higher sensitivity to photoinhibition than R. yasudae. These results support the idea that association of the photobionts with the mycobionts increases tolerance to photoinhibition under drying conditions.
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En
Ano de publicação:
2009
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Article